8 research outputs found
The link between multidrug resistance and oxidative stress
EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
HuR controls lung branching morphogenesis and mesenchymal FGF networks
AbstractLung development is controlled by regulatory networks governing mesenchymal–epithelial interactions. Transcription factors and signaling molecules are known to participate in this process, yet little is known about the post-transcriptional regulation of these networks. Here we demonstrate that the RNA-binding protein (RBP) HuR is an essential regulator of mesenchymal responses during lung branching. Its epiblast-induced deletion blocked the morphogenesis of distal bronchial branches at the initiation of the pseudoglandular stage. The phenotype originated from defective mesenchymal responses since the conditional restriction of HuR deletion in epithelial progenitors did not affect distal branching or the completion of lung maturation. The loss of HuR resulted in the reduction of the key inducer of bud outgrowth and endodermal branching, FGF10 and one of its putative transcriptional regulators, Tbx4. Furthermore, exogenous FGF10 could rescue the branching defect of affected lung buds. HuR was found to bind and control the Fgf10 and Tbx4 mRNAs; as a result its deletion abolished their inducible post-transcriptional regulation by the mesenchymal regulator FGF9. Our data reveals HuR as the first RBP identified to play a dominant role in lung development and as a key post-transcriptional regulator of networks guiding tissue remodeling during branching morphogenesis
Role of intracellular labile iron, ferritin, and antioxidant defence in resistance of chronically adapted Jurkat T cells to hydrogen peroxide
AbstractTo examine the role of intracellular labile iron pool (LIP), ferritin (Ft), and antioxidant defence in cellular resistance to oxidative stress on chronic adaptation, a new H2O2-resistant Jurkat T cell line “HJ16” was developed by gradual adaptation of parental “J16” cells to high concentrations of H2O2. Compared to J16 cells, HJ16 cells exhibited much higher resistance to H2O2-induced oxidative damage and necrotic cell death (up to 3mM) and had enhanced antioxidant defence in the form of significantly higher intracellular glutathione and mitochondrial ferritin (FtMt) levels as well as higher glutathione-peroxidase (GPx) activity. In contrast, the level of the Ft H-subunit (FtH) in the H2O2-adapted cell line was found to be 7-fold lower than in the parental J16 cell line. While H2O2 concentrations higher than 0.1mM fully depleted the glutathione content of J16 cells, in HJ16 cells the same treatments decreased the cellular glutathione content to only half of the original value. In HJ16 cells, H2O2 concentrations higher than 0.1mM increased the level of FtMt up to 4-fold of their control values but had no effect on the FtMt levels in J16 cells. Furthermore, while the basal cytosolic level of LIP was similar in both cell lines, H2O2 treatment substantially increased the cytosolic LIP levels in J16 but not in HJ16 cells. H2O2 treatment also substantially decreased the FtH levels in J16 cells (up to 70% of the control value). In contrast in HJ16 cells, FtH levels were not affected by H2O2 treatment. These results indicate that chronic adaptation of J16 cells to high concentrations of H2O2 has provoked a series of novel and specific cellular adaptive responses that contribute to higher resistance of HJ16 cells to oxidative damage and cell death. These include increased cellular antioxidant defence in the form of higher glutathione and FtMt levels, higher GPx activity, and lower FtH levels. Further adaptive responses include the significantly reduced cellular response to oxidant-mediated glutathione depletion, FtH modulation, and labile iron release and a significant increase in FtMt levels following H2O2 treatment
The RNA-Binding Protein Elavl1/HuR Is Essential for Placental Branching Morphogenesis and Embryonic Developmentâ–ż â€
HuR is an RNA-binding protein implicated in a diverse array of pathophysiological processes due to its effects on the posttranscriptional regulation of AU- and U-rich mRNAs. Here we reveal HuR's requirement in embryonic development through its genetic ablation. Obligatory HuR-null embryos exhibited a stage retardation phenotype and failed to survive beyond midgestation. By means of conditional transgenesis, we restricted HuR's mutation in either embryonic or endothelial compartments to demonstrate that embryonic lethality is consequent to defects in extraembryonic placenta. HuR's absence impaired the invagination of allantoic capillaries into the chorionic trophoblast layer and the differentiation of syncytiotrophoblast cells that control the morphogenesis and vascularization of the placental labyrinth and fetal support. HuR-null embryos rescued from these placental defects proceeded to subsequent developmental stages but displayed defects in skeletal ossification, fusions in limb elements, and asplenia. By coupling gene expression measurements, data meta-analysis, and HuR-RNA association assays, we identified transcription and growth factor mRNAs controlled by HuR, primarily at the posttranscriptional level, to guide morphogenesis, specification, and patterning. Collectively, our data demonstrate the dominant role of HuR in organizing gene expression programs guiding placental labyrinth morphogenesis, skeletal specification patterns, and splenic ontogeny
Myeloid cell expression of the RNA-binding protein HuR protects mice from pathologic inflammation and colorectal carcinogenesis
The innate immune response involves a variety of inflammatory reactions that can
result in inflammatory disease and cancer if they are not resolved and instead are
allowed to persist. The effective activation and resolution of innate immune
responses relies on the production and posttranscriptional regulation of mRNAs
encoding inflammatory effector proteins. The RNA-binding protein HuR binds to and
regulates such mRNAs, but its exact role in inflammation remains unclear. Here we
show that HuR maintains inflammatory homeostasis by controlling macrophage plasticity
and migration. Mice lacking HuR in myeloid-lineage cells, which include many of the
cells of the innate immune system, displayed enhanced sensitivity to endotoxemia,
rapid progression of chemical-induced colitis, and severe susceptibility to
colitis-associated cancer. The myeloid cell–specific HuR-deficient mice
had an exacerbated inflammatory cytokine profile and showed enhanced CCR2-mediated
macrophage chemotaxis. At the molecular level, activated macrophages from these mice
showed enhancements in the use of inflammatory mRNAs (including Tnf,
Tgfb, Il10, Ccr2, and
Ccl2) due to a lack of inhibitory effects on their inducible
translation and/or stability. Conversely, myeloid overexpression of HuR induced
posttranscriptional silencing, reduced inflammatory profiles, and protected mice from
colitis and cancer. Our results highlight the role of HuR as a homeostatic
coordinator of mRNAs that encode molecules that guide innate inflammatory effects and
demonstrate the potential of harnessing the effects of HuR for clinical benefit
against pathologic inflammation and cancer